
Marlink to be acquired by Providence
Providence Equity Partners has entered exclusive negotiations with its peer Apax Partners to acquire France-based satellite communications company Marlink.
A report by local publication Capital Finance claimed that the transaction would value the target at more than EUR 1bn, without citing specific sources. Marlink recorded USD 500m in revenues and EBITDA of USD 170m in 2020, the report said.
Apax and Providence declined to comment further. Both parties announced in early August that they had entered exclusive negotiations.
In June, Mergermarket reported that Providence, I Squared Capital and CVC Partners were among a select pool of suitors admitted to the second round of bidding for Marlink, citing four sources familiar with the matter.
Binding offers were due on 12 July. Owner Apax France was looking for bids in the region of 10x EBITDA, one of the sources said.
Marlink was being marketed based on EBITDA in the USD 130m-150m range, depending on adjustments, two of the sources said.
Apax, advised by BNP Paribas and Goldman Sachs, widened the sale process in May to private equity and infrastructure investors to gauge interest in the business. An earlier approach by Inmarsat, a key supplier of satellite bandwidth to Marlink, fell through earlier in the year. Inmarsat's bid for the business was rumoured to have been in the region of USD 1.3bn.
Apax carved Marlink (then known as Vizada) out of Airbus in 2015. According to reports at the time, Airbus priced the asset at around the EUR 450m mark, equivalent to 8-10x EBITDA.
Apax's takeover saw the firm return to the helm of the business four years after selling it to Airbus. The GP set up Vizada via the merger of Paris-headquartered France Telecoms Mobile Satellite Communications (FTMSC) and Norwegian peer Telenor Satellite Services. Apax wholly acquired the former for an estimated EUR 60m in August 2006, when it invested via its EUR 720m sixth fund. Meanwhile, the latter was carved out from parent Telenor for USD 400m in January 2007; Apax then moved to merge both assets later in the year.
In May 2010, Vizada secured a USD 116m injection from minority investor Hutton Collins. Apax, still the majority shareholder, claimed at the time to have recouped most of its original investment via this partial exit. The final exit for the asset took place in August 2011, when Airbus subsidiary Astrium bought it in a USD 960m trade sale. According to Apax, the 2010 and 2011 exits saw it reap a combined 4x money multiple and 40% IRR.
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